THE TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, JANUARY 5, 1899
THE VOICES OF
THE PAST.
[
OBEYED THE JUDGE.
CHILDREN’S EYES.
From the ”alc of the past, thro’ the mist of Got His Man and Bronrt
------ Him to Did you ever look
years,
—
«ant
Town.
. In a child’s clear eyes.
Voices of the long ago
And feel the heaven that lay
Among the wills that were probated
Come dreamily, soothingly to my ears,
As the sun of my life sinks low.
the other day was that of a negro blaek- In the innocent depth
Of the open soul,
In the whispering breexe. In the pattering
nan>ed Austin Thompson, whose
As yet unsoiled by clay?
shop was on Sycamore street. There is
rain,
Oh! a holy thing
As I sit by the fireside glow,
a story connected with this man's name In a child’s cle ar eyes.
I hear in faint echoes the tones again
that is worth telling, says the Lexington
And tender the hand should be
Of the friends I used to know.
I (Ky.) Herald.
1 hat touches the flower
Still
wet with the dew
When around the eaves the etorm-wind
Just after the war old Benjamin F
Of Heaven’s own mystery.
howls,
Graves
was
county
judge.
He
was
an
I am, as of yore, at school,
It was said “Of Old”
And hear with trembling the master’s eccentric man, very peculiar in manv That the demons that strove
growls.
ways, very honest and very positive.
For the doom of the race that fell,
As he glares from his three-legged «took
He ruled with a strong hand. One day If meeting the look
Of
a child's pure eyes
All in fancy, forsooth, when the south wLnd Austin Thompson, who lived in the
Sank down to their native hell.
sighs.
county, was brought before him
As the evening shadows grow,
charged with hog stealing. The meat And the truth that hide«
I hear once more a fair maiden’s replies
In the myth “Of Old”
was found upon his premises, but he
In the twilight long ago.
Breaks as a star doth rise;
find made no effort at concealment.
For the ir.most heaven
And the merry brook, as it softly purls
Of innocence dwells
He
acknowledged
having
the
hog
and
Its song in the summer air,
In the trust of a child’s sweet eyes.
Killing it, but insisted that he bought
Calls up from the ¡«st the boys and girls
At play in the meadows fair.
the hog from another negro, who rep And this is the look
resented it as his own. Judge Graves T hat the God-man loved,
As I list to these low. sweet voices of yore
When lie gathered them close to His
inquired if he could “bring that other
What Joy awakes in my heart’
breast.
For their music delights and charms me fax nigger into court.” He was answered And, laying His hands
more
On
their
shining heads,
somewhat doubtfully. The old judge
Than the best musician’s art.
Pronounced them forever blest.
then answered to Austin that he "must
—A. S. Brendle, in Good Housekeeping.
■‘V
bring that other nigger in, dead or And the angels sent
From His kingdom above,
alive.”
To
watch,
ard
to
guard,
and
to
stay,
THE KING OF LAPLAND.
A day or two afterward Austin drove Do always behold
I know a tiny monarch who has taken his up with a cart to the judge's office, and The face divine
Of Him who spoke that day.
command
entering informed his honor that he
YV,ithin a quiet region, where a faithful had his man.
Are
we worthy to share
little band
The holy charge?
"Bring him in,” said the judge.
Of people do his bidding, or yield him hom
Let
us fold our hands and pray,
age true,
I can’t,” said Austin; "he’s dead.”
Lest we merit the doom
And watch his faintest gesture, as old vas
Of
those
who cast
He
had
followed
the
old
judge's
in
sals used to do.
structions to the letter. The other “ Offense’’ in the little one’s way.
—
Emily
B.
Dickenson, in N. Y. Home
His territory’s bordered by two encircling negro refused to accompany Austin to
Journal.
arms,
town,
and
so
Austin
killed
him.
And keeping in their shelter, he is safe
»
from all alarms.
Of course it caused an immense sen
FEEDING A PUMPKIN.
This land is something “rocky” if he feels sation in the community, and there
Inclined for jest,
Nebraska
Farmer'« Saccensful Scheme
Or lies at peace, a quiet plain, when he was talk of impeaching the judge and
to Win a Ten-Dollar Prise.
would stay at rest.
I of hanging Austin. But nothing after
*‘Say, did you know’ that pumpkins
all was done about it, and the matter
One mountain rises northward, and Is
could be fed and made to grow to an
was allowed to drop.
known as Mother’s Brow,
enormous size?” asked a retired farm
While east and west are twin-gray lakes,
er of the Omaha Bee man.
reflecting, I avow,
BOVINE VALOR.
The prettiest bit of nature that a human
‘‘It’s a fact,” he continued. ‘‘I remem
heart can see
Two Cows Stormed a Barbed-Wire ber one spring that my father was
Whene’er the little monarch Is alert for
Fence to Rescue Their Calves.
elected secretary of a county agricul
jubilee.
The editor of the Condon (Ore.) Globe tural society and he told me that he
But when he’s feeling weary from the rid saw a deed of valor lately that was w as going to offer a prize of ten dollars
ing cut in state,
worth recording as well as seeing. A for the largest pumpkin exhibited at
Or bowing to his subjects and serfs im
herd of cattle, among them two cows the fair. 1 determined to get that
portunate.
Retiring to the castle, his regal head, our accompanied by their calves, were graz prize and I did.
king
ing in tall, dead grass when the calves
‘‘IIow did I do it ? By raising the big
Lay down in princely grandeur, while lov
became separated a little way from the gest pumpkin, of course. I selected a
ing minstrels sing.
rest of the cattle, and some wolves vine that looked unusually thrifty and
Jf you would find his royal seat you need started in pursuit of them. After run
gave it extra care until pumpkins had
not sail the sea,
For—strange enough—his throne is set in ning about 200 yards the calves came to formed about as large as a baseball.
this home of the free.
a high, five-wired, barbed-wire fence, Selecting one of these I began to feed ift
Just find the nearest nursery, and bow to and, being small, managed to get
Yes, feed it. I cut a gash in lhe stem
the command
the and run a soft cotton rag through it.
Of the loving little monarch, who Is king through it. On the other side of
fence
was
an
open
pasture.
of all Lapland.
Then I covered the place with wax.
—Alice Crary, in Ladles’ Home Journal.
The wolves quickly followed the Every night I set a pan of milk on each
calves through the fence, and were rap side of the stem and put an end of the
idly running them down on the other rag in each pan. That pumpkin would
SLEEPING WITH DAN’L.
side, when the two cow mothers discov drink up that milk faster than a pig.
How the Squatter*« Son Entertained ered what was going on. Each uttered It would absorb from a quart to three
the Vlaltins Stranger.
a loud bellow, hoisted her tail and jiints every night and it began to swell
The squatter informed me that there started for the rescue.
at an enormous rate. When the fair
wasn't a spare room in the house, but if
It appeared to be a hopeless chase, for opened I loaded that pumpkin into a
I was willing to sleep with his boy the fence intervened, and the cows were,
ie aid of a derrick — it
Daniel he’d be glad to accommodate certainly much too large to get through]
took it down
me, and, as I was completely fagged out it. They knew well enough that it "affi to acculturai hall. Of
from a 40-mile ride that day, J was only there, and could, beside, see it plainly 'thè ten dólter».
too glad to accept his offer. The boy but both cows plunged straight into it.
hnv* often w onde rd! L w many
was a lanky young fellow about 16
The watching editor, horrified, looked pie« that xvould hart* made. Eatimat-
years old, and we had hardly got into to see them burled back, frightfully . ing 33 per cent, waste, there were
bed when he called out to his father in wounded, but, instead, one of the posts ah- >ut 202 pounds of pie material and
the next room:
gave way under the onslaught, th* | 5 1-3 ounces to the pie would make—”
“Dad, the stranger’s got all the bed wires sank dow„. and in another
I But the reporter was too Imsy to hear
ment the mothers were on the pasture I the rest, n? was figuring on feeding a
clothes!”
As a matter of fact, I simply had my side ot the f*nce. badly cut and bleed watermelon on port wine and astonish-
share of them, but to quiet him I gave ing, but still able to charge th? wolves j ing the world.
him some more, and was closing my successfully and put them to flight.
Soon the cows were licking the res GALLANT CONDUCT OF PIPER.
eyes when he shouted:
“Dad, the stranger’s pokin' his elbow cued calves affectionately, and the co
instance« of Bravery Shown in Peril-
yotes were how ling a disappointed duet
ill my back!”
on« Quarter«.
from
the
summit
of
a
knoll
near
by.
I movz-'J further away from him, but
There have been several instances of
a minute later he continued:
bravery similar to that of the gallant
“Dad, the stranger's makin’ faces at STRANGE CASES OF POISONING Gordon piper at Dargai, who continued
Gila Bite Wa. Not Deadly, Hot Im* to play after both his legs had been
*•
ix>ok-a-yere, stranger,” said “dad”
lirella Tree We..
shot off, says the London Chronicle.
— as be came to our door with a lighted
In the far northeastern part of Ari One of these, which occurred duringthe
candle in his hand: “Dan’l has alius bin zona territory, that is to say in Navajo Peninsular wars, was almost identical
brought up as a pet and is kinder techy, county, a young man was bitten by a with that of the capture of the Dargai
but if yo’ don’t worry him he’s one o’ Gila monster recently. Almost at the ridge. It was at Vimiera, wttien the
the nicest boys in the hull kentry. Jest same time, at Yuma, in the extreme then Seventy-first Highlanders hurled
give him his way and he won't find any southwestern corner of the territory, themselves against the French as a
fault with yo’.”
a little girl ate some berries that fell counter-stroke to the attempt of Kel
I gave him his way and all of the from the umbrella trees that grow so lerman to recover six captured guns,
clothes and nearly the whole of the plentiful in southern Arizona.
The and drove back their assailants in head
bed, but the old man had hardly left us young man lived, but the little maiden long rout. When the Highlanders w ere
when the ingTate called out peevishly: died. The latter case is the more re advancing Piper Stewart, of the gren
“Dad, the stranger says he’ll kill me markable, perhaps, for until this in adier company, fell, his thigh being
when yo’ and ma go to sleep!”
stance not even the medical profession broken by a musket shot. Yet he re
"Did yo’ say that, stranger?” asked suspected that there was anything fused to quit the field, and. sitting on
the father, as he reappeared at the door poisonous about the umbrella tree. The a knapsack, continued to inspire his
again.
child's name was Dora Lynch, her fa comrades with a pibroch, saying:
"Why, of course not!” I replied, an ther being well-known in Yuma. The “De’il ha’e me. lads, if ye shall want
grily. “I haven’t said a single word to lucky young man in the northeast was for music!” For this he received a
him since we came to bed!”
Orrin Barney, who had started out with handsome stand of pipes from the High
“Wall,” he continued, kindly, “jest a party for Utah. He was following a land society of London.
b'ar in mind that Dan’l has alius bin wagon up a hill and "scotching" it with
Again, there the historical incident
brung up as a pet anddon’t bother him. rocks. He reached down for a rock of Pipe Major Mackay, who, when his
He’s a mighty nice boy, Dan’l is. and and picked up a Gila monster. The regiment had formed square to receive
yo'll say so when yo’ know him better.” monster's head had to be cut,
to a charge of French cavalry’ nt Waterloo,
I was too tired to answer him again, loosen the grip on Barney s hand. The stepped outside the square and strode
and for the third time was almost in the latter suffered severe pain for two days, round the bayonet bristling ranks play
land of dreams when that boy broke out but then recovered. His only remedies ing his most inspirating pibroch in the
presence of his comrades—nn incident
again:
were tobacco and whisky.
“Dad, the stranger’s snorin’ and won’t
which forms the subject of one of Mr.
let me git to sleep!”
It ia said that the pilgrim to Mecca, Bogie’s finest battle pictures, exhibited
“Dan’l!” called the squatter in a starting from Washington city, would at the academy a year or two ago.
voice of thunder, “and yo’, too. stran have to travel 6,598 miles in order to
ger, if yo’ uns don’t behave in thar’ and reach the Caaba.
let me'n the ole woman git to sleep I’ll
HIS WEDDING TRIP.
To go from New York to Aden, in
cunt in and wallop the both of you!”
Arabia, vis Iztndon, ny the swiftest It Wa. a Lose Tim. A<o. Ha, ICvew
I said to myself that if he'd come in neeamer and crossing the continent of
Now He Sometime. Hear, oi It.
and wallop Daniel for about two hours Europe by rail, requires 20 days.
“The day I waa married," said a Lew
he could have everything I possessed
iston I Me.) man, "a thin crust had
for his trouble, and I kept repeating
GOLD AND SILVER.
formed over the snow all over the ooun-
this over and over to myself and sink
A pound of feathers contains in try. The w ind was blowing a gale, and
ing off to sleep when that little villain
ounces, or 7.000 grains; a pound of gold my wife and myaelf started for our
suddenly planted his two feet against
new home at Sabattua.
contains 12 ounces, or 5.760 grains.
the small of my back and sent me out on
“Just beyond Thornew Corner the
In the calendar year 1894 3,093,97»
the floor with a bang that shook the
wind took the box in which my wife’s
house from cellar to rafter. I lay where silver dollars were struck at the mints: wedding hat- reposed, and whirled it
I fell, expecting “dad” to rush in and in the fiscal year 1895, ending June X', out of the sleigh upon the crust. I got
make good his threat, but as he didn't 3,956,011 dollars were struck.
A woman at Walkerville. Mont., who out and chased it.
appear I finally got up and dressed, and
"It kept just ahead of me for a quar
keeps
hens, gathered four dollars'
passed the rest of the night on^ two
ter of a mile, and w ent rolling over and
worth
of
gold
in
the
craws
of
three
chairs by the stove, while "Dan’l." sat
over across the Lew iston lx>g. The wind
isfied at last, slept the sleep of the just chickens she had just killed. Now she cut through me like a knife, but I kept
follows
her
hens
to
discover
the
spot
and kept up a snore the livelong night
on and I last.saw it catch on a hard-hack
which sounded like the growls of a where they find gold.
bush. I made a flying leap to catch it
A
California
gold
prospector
has
ferocious grizzly bear.—N. Y. World.
and sprawled all over it. I lugged it
written a letter addressed to Mayor bark, only to find that my wife bad been
Colored emigrants starting from Pratt, of St. Paul, Minn., in which he unable to stand the cold wind and had
XVashing’on to Monrovia, in Liberia, ailvances the claim that gold can be lo
driven on.
would have before them a voyage of cated in eastern Minnesota.
“I walked into Sahattus carrying the
Production ot gold has enormously wedding hat, and there met my men
3.645 miles.
The returns issued by the London increased, particularly in California friends.
"I sometimes hear of the incident
board of trade fbr March show an in and Utah. Gold ore yielding as low as
crease of £2.380.000 in imports and aa three dollars per ton ran now be now.”
worked
by
the
new
cyanide
process,
increase of £1,900,000 in exports dur
ing the month, a« com pared with March whereas silver ore must show »24 a ton
before it can be worked.
.__
last year.
Zöllen pou^ß.
ALLEN,
Proprietor.
First class accommodation
at second class rate.
BEST
MEALS IN THE
CITY.
Tillamook, Ore
llüHdquarters for Forest Grove Stage Line«
"My Kingdom For a Horse."
WELL, WE’VE GOT IT AND MORE TOO
If 37- c - cl “S77"a.rxt to ZD i I xto
-¿L. IToie G-erxtle Horse
To ex TTioe Easy
Come to Oxxr Statole a,rxd.
G-et it.
The Tillamook Livery and Sale Stable,
OREGON
TILLAMOOK,
6.00 ROUND TRIP.
3.50 ONE WAY.
ASTORIA AND
TILLAMOOK.
WILL
RUN
THE
Steamer W. H. HARRISON
or R-
Will innke tiiua «vary fir« Java, tlM
iMMg. between *«ioria «ad
Tillamook City, canying frei«l>t and
E, SANftOtiN & CO.. ASTORIA ; or COHN & co.,
TILLAMOOK. AGENTS.
WHEN YOU WANT LUMBER,
Remember that we keep the best of
everything in Stock and at prices as
low as the lowest-
FOLLOWING IS OUR LIST OF PRICES :
COMMCN ROUGH LUMBER at
<XI |wr thousand feet,
SHIPLAP at ¿9.00 per thousand feet,
SIZED LUMBER at 9 00 per thousand feet,
FLOORING. No. 2, at $12 00 per thouHand feet.
•
FLOORING, No. 1, at $16.00 per thoiiHaud feet,
.. g
t|louHnni| feP,
RUSTIC, No.
RUSTIC, No. 1. at $16.000 per thousand feet.
No. 1, FINISH, at $15.1X1 per thounand feet,
MOULDINGS. J4c i» r foot, |>er inch in width.
ALL SIN. PLANKING at $7 per 1000 feet.
Tillamook
T imber L and , A ct J une 3. I878.—N otice F or
P ublication .
United States Land Office,
Oregon City, Oregon, October nth, 1898.’”
Notice is hereby given that in compliance
with the provisions of the act of Congress
of June 3rd, 1878, entitled “An act for the
sale of timber lands :n the States of California,
Oregon, Nevada and Washington Territory,” as
extended to all the Public Land States by act of
August 4, 1892,
CRI8 T. STARR.
of Dayton, county of Yamhill, State of Oregon,
has this day filed in this office his sworn state
ment No. 3081, for the purchase ot the 11H of s’4
of Section No. 32 in Tow nship No. 1 s. Range
No. 6 w, and will offer proof to show that the
land sought is more valuable for its timber or
stonethau for agricultural purposes, and to es
tablish his claim to said land before the Register
and Receiver of this office at Oregon City, Ore.,
<>u Saturday, the .Mil day ot Januiux, D- al
He names as witnesses:
Nathaniel Stretch, of Dayton. Ore., Rilv G.
Smith, of Dayton, Ore., John Glen, of Dayton
Ore , Albert K.Cook, of McMinnville. Ore.
Any and all persons claiming adversely tho
above-described lands are requested to file their
chums in this office on or before said 20th day
of December, 1898.
C har . B. M oorks , Register.
T imber L and , A ct J unk 3. 1878.—N otice for
P ublication .
United Suites Land Office,
Oregon City, Oregon,
October lilh, 1898.
Notice ia hereby given that in compliance
with the provisions of the act of Congress
of June 3rd, 1M78, entitled “An act for the
sale of t niber lands in the States of Califor
nia, Oregon, Nevada, ami Washington Territo
ry," as extended to all the Public Land States
by act of August 4, 1892,
LUTHER I
FLETCHER,
of Dayton, c unity of Yamhill, State of Oregon,
has this day filed in this office his sworn state
ment No 3050, for the purchase of the e% ot e%
of Section No 24 in Township No 2 S, Range No 7
w, aud willoffiti proof to show that tin- land
sought is more valuable for its timber or stone
than for agricultural purposes, ami to establish
his claim to said land before the Register and
Receiver of this office at Oregon City, Oregon,
on Saturday, the 28th day of January, 1899.
He names as xvituesses:
Albert E. < 00k, of McMinnville, Yamhill
county, Oregon, Riley G. Smith, of Dayton,
Yamhill county, Oregon, James B. Mellott, of
Dayton, Yamhill county, Oregon, John W.
Fishburn, of Dayton. Yamhill county, Oregon.
Any and all persons claiming adversely the
above-described lands are requested to tile their
claims in this office on or before said 21st day of
December, ih98.
C has . B. M oores , Register.
Reduced
&
T imber L and , A ct J unk 3, 1878.—N otice for
P ublication .
United States Land Office,
Oregon City. Oregon. Octoberiith, 1898.
Notice is hereby given that in coinpliHUce
with the provisions of the act of Congress ot
June 3rd, 1878. entitled. “Au act for the sale
of timber lands in the States of California.
Oregon, Nevada and Washington Territory’’
as extended to all the Public Land States by act
of August 4, 1892.
GKORGK H. BAXTER,
of Dayton, county of Yamhill, Slate of Oregon,
has this day filed in this office his sworn state
ment No. 3055, tor the put chase of r’., of w‘i of
Section No 26 in Township No. 2 s. Ran *e No. 7
w. and will offer pt oof to show that the land
sought is more valuable tor its timber or stone
than for agricultural purposes, and to establish
his claim to said laud before the Register and
Receiver of tiiis office at Oregon City, Oregon,
on Saturday, the 28th day of January, 1899,
He names as witnesses:
Riley G. Smith, of Da x ton, Yamhill county,
Oregon, John Starr, of Dayton, Yamhill county’
Oregon, William H. Fletcher, of McMinnville,
Yamhill county, Oregon, Albe t K. Cook, of
McMinnville, Yamhill county, Oregon.
Any and all persons claiming adversely the
above described lands are requested to file their
claims in this office on or before said 20th day
of December, I898.
C has . B. M oores , Register.
T imber L and , A ct J unk 5, 1878.—N otice Eon
P ublication .
United States Land Office,
Oregon City Oregon,
November sth. 1898.
Notice. Ab hereby given that ill compfe
revisions of tin* act of (’"g-
I, entitled “ An act ior
iiu the States ol Cnliloi»
Ulasliinaton Tetri-
■Mt^l.and States
ineiit No. 8078, foi the pure
of Section No 8 in Township NTT
7 xv, an<l will offer proof to shoxv
sought is more valuuble for its timber
than for Hgriculturiil purposes, and to estab
his claim to said land before the Register a
Receiver <»f tin- «illite at Oiegon City, (Ireji >-a,
on Saturday, the 28th day of January,
I!c naint'hiiR witnesses:
Albeit K. took, of McMinnville, Oregonh
William Cain, of Dayton. Oregon , Rily <*.
Smith, of Dayton, Ore.; J. W. Coffin, of Daytog,
Oregon.
Any and all persons claiming adversely the
above described lands are requested to tile their
claims in this office on or before said 28th day ot
January, 1899.
(.’ has . B. Moores Register.
notick
for publication .
Land Office at Oregon City, Ore.,
Herein ber 9U1, ¡8<> k .
Notice is hereby given that the following
named Mettler has filed notice of his intention
to make thud proof in Niipport of hi« claim, and
that said proof will be made bciore the County
< lerk of THIamook co , at Tillamook, Oregon,
on February 1st, 1R9H, viz :
J j HN WILLIAM STEINMETZ;
H. K. 11,784, for the Lot 3, He
of Nw
and
E «4 of Sw
of aec 4, Tp >N. R BW.
He naineM the following xvltnesses to ¡»rove
hi» continuous reaideuce upon and cultivation
of said land, viz
John Conklin, James Wiley, Gustav Kunze,
EdwardG. K- West, of Tillamook, Oregon.
C has . H. M oores . Register.
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN.-That by
virtue ot hii order of th«' County Court of tho
State of Oregon for the County of Tillamook,
sitting in probate, made and entered in the
record» of said Court on tbe aolh day of May,
189K. the administrator of the estate of J. <’.
HALL, deceased, will, from and after the 20th
day of January, 1*9, i>r-x:rr<1 to sell at private
sale foi cash, the following described real pro-
|M*rty iMrlonglng to »aid estate, to-wit
The W J4 of the Bw ' 4 of see. 27 and the Nc
of the Sr '4, and »he Sr *4 of the Ne % of sec.
28, containing 160 acre» in Tp 3 H. R. V W of
the Willamette Meridian in Oregon, nave ami
except all of that portion of the Sc % of the
Sf % of sec. 28 lying North of the Big Ne»tiicca
River hik I containing 15 acre» more or I cmm ,
deeded bV W A Hanoi mid wife t-> R o.
Richards, November nth, 1891, also saving and
excepting all ot that portion of the Nw
of
toe Sw >4 of see 27, said Tp and Range hrie
to fore deeded by W. A. Hanor and wife to James
Hughey ami wife, leaving n balance conveyed
herein of 140 acres more or less.
Dated at Tillamook, In Tillamook county,
Oregon, this 12th dav of December A.D., 189H.
CHARLES E HALL
Administrator of the Estate of J. C. Hall,
deceased.
Lumbering Co
ST KAM ER
Direct From S. F. to Tillamook
WHERE TO INSURE.
Freight handled with pispateh and at lowest rates. Fruit delivered in good order.
THE LIVERPOOL AND LONDON AND
Best Accommodations and Cheajiest Route to or from Tillamook.
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Every attention paid to wants and conveniences of passenger. Firat-class table set.
AGENT rOlt TILLAMOOK.
J 8. STEPHENS.
WILL SAIL FROM SAN FRANCISCO ABOUT OCTOBER 30th AND
EVERY 10 DAYS AFTER.
HOME MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY.
For further particulars apply to
AUKNTH VOX TILLAMOOK.
BIGGS A STEPHENS.
ufk.. "W~.
¿C Co.,
SCHOOL DESKS AND SUPPLIES OF
EVERY DESCRIPTION.
J 8. HTEI'HENK ia agent for the
Northwest School Furniture Com|>any
for Tillamook co.
No. 14 C aupobxia S tbekt , 8 am F banciao ; or to T hicker L i 'MHHR C o .
I
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I'ER
MONTH JUL MONTH
in The Evening Trlrgrnni, of
Portland, Oregon, It in the Inrg-
eat evening uewapa|>er publish-
ed in Oregon ; it contain* all the
newa of the atale and nation, Try
it for a month. A «ample copy
will he mailed to yon free. Ad-
dreea
EOU/. G. E. U/IBT Proprietor.
This Hotel has just been newly furnished and put In
first class repair and is now by far the best in the city
E verything C omfortable and H omelike -
Tirei hiimbli,
9
Tillamook Ore
THE TELEGRAM,
i
Port! Mild,Or